SkooterG
Purveyor of Crooked Facts
My mechanic told me not to worry about the recall. He has not heard of any gear failures. I decided not to do mine.
To each his own, but I really don't think that is good advice.
My mechanic told me not to worry about the recall. He has not heard of any gear failures. I decided not to do mine.
To chime in here Lou D: Skooterg knows of what he speaks of. Seriously, he really does.To each his own, but I really don't think that is good advice.
Hint: 2016+ are 6 speedIs this recall for the 5-speed or the newer 6-speed?
To each his own, but I really don't think that is good advice.
A normal recall will involve many not just a couple reports of failure. If they are going to shell the money to have it done, it means it has been proven to cause serious injury or possible injury due to the failure. i would chew on that a while before going out on a ride.To each his own, but I really don't think that is good advice.
Not likely to be doing 70 mph in second gear, but wouldn't be much fun under heavy acceleration on a highway on-ramp or during engine braking.Sound advice from ScooterG. An engine stop at 70MPH is not my idea of fun...
I think they are doing the repairs from the bottom and not tearing down the engine.I can think of one very good reason to consider passing on the gear repair: the engine has to be torn apart to fix the problem. So... replace a gear with a low failure rate, and then cope with whatever surprises come from not putting the motor back together correctly.
I had the work done early on in the recall, and genuinely wish I'd left it alone. Aparrently, Yamaha went through a couple of iterations of how to do the job. The first iteration involved a major disassembly, and the second involved some shortcuts. I don't know how it's currently being done, but it does give some cause for concern.
OTOH, having to deal with a real failure on the road... Nobody ever promised life would be easy, and meant it.
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